Physical Review Research (Aug 2022)

Structural magnetic glassiness in the spin ice Dy_{2}Ti_{2}O_{7}

  • Anjana M. Samarakoon,
  • André Sokolowski,
  • Bastian Klemke,
  • Ralf Feyerherm,
  • Michael Meissner,
  • R. A. Borzi,
  • Feng Ye,
  • Qiang Zhang,
  • Zhiling Dun,
  • Haidong Zhou,
  • T. Egami,
  • Jonathan N. Hallén,
  • Ludovic Jaubert,
  • Claudio Castelnovo,
  • Roderich Moessner,
  • S. A. Grigera,
  • D. Alan Tennant

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.4.033159
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 3
p. 033159

Abstract

Read online Read online

The origin and nature of glassy dynamics presents one of the central enigmas of condensed-matter physics across a broad range of systems ranging from window glass to spin glasses. The spin-ice compound Dy_{2}Ti_{2}O_{7}, which is perhaps best known as hosting a three-dimensional Coulomb spin liquid with magnetically charged monopole excitations, also falls out of equilibrium at low temperature. How and why it does so remains an open question. Based on an analysis of low-temperature diffuse neutron-scattering experiments employing different cooling protocols alongside recent magnetic noise studies, combined with extensive numerical modeling, we argue that upon cooling, the spins freeze into what may be termed a “structural magnetic glass,” without an a priori need for chemical or structural disorder. Specifically, our model indicates the presence of frustration on two levels, first producing a near-degenerate constrained manifold inside which phase ordering kinetics is in turn frustrated. A remarkable feature is that monopoles act as sole annealers of the spin network and their pathways and history encode the development of glass dynamics, allowing the glass formation to be visualized. Our results suggest that spin ice Dy_{2}Ti_{2}O_{7} provides one prototype of magnetic glass formation specifically and a setting for the study of kinetically constrained systems more generally.